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Williams, Brenda – Clearing House: A Journal of Educational Strategies, Issues and Ideas, 2013
Middle school students from military families face unique challenges, especially when their parents are deployed. Among the challenges they experience are frequent relocations; issues that affect academic achievement; uncertainty; and changes in roles, responsibilities, and relationships at home. Reunification involves issues of the returning…
Descriptors: Middle School Students, Student Needs, Military Personnel, Early Adolescents
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McIntyre, Thomas; Barowsky, Ellis I.; Tong, Virginia – Journal of the American Academy of Special Education Professionals, 2011
Educators' lack of knowledge of the cultural and immigration overlays on behaviors presents a quandary. It makes it difficult, given the present state of assessment in this area, to determine whether an emotional or behavioral disorder exists, or whether the behavior is acceptable to the newcomer's culture and therefore reflects a cultural marker.…
Descriptors: Immigrants, Student Adjustment, Behavior Problems, Emotional Disturbances
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Green, Bonnie A. – Journal of Instructional Psychology, 2010
In decades past, children entered into classrooms that were less diverse. They all came in knowing much of the same information, having had very similar experiences. They spoke the same language, ate the same food, and heard the same stories and music. In many case, they even knew each other. This group of less diverse students stayed less diverse…
Descriptors: Schemata (Cognition), Student Diversity, Cultural Differences, Family Structure
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Wenzel, Christine; Rowley, Laura – TEACHING Exceptional Children, 2010
In a study conducted in 2007 by the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention, the prevalence of autism spectrum disorders in the United States is approximately 1 in 150 people. An increase has also been seen in the number of students with Asperger's Syndrome (AS) attending postsecondary education institutions. Because of the rise in numbers of…
Descriptors: Skill Development, Interpersonal Relationship, Autism, Asperger Syndrome
Detwiler, Michelle – Exceptional Parent, 2008
The word "transition" often sends fear through the hearts of families who have children with special needs. The last great transition one's child has probably faced was going from pre-school to elementary school. Now, years later, the adolescent will face new time changes, program and transportation changes, and a new and different conglomeration…
Descriptors: Disabilities, Special Needs Students, Middle Schools, Student Adjustment
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Doll, Beth; Jones, Kristin; Osborn, Allison; Dooley, Kadie; Turner, April – Psychology in the Schools, 2011
Resilience is a very useful construct for framing school mental health services to children and is particularly applicable to mental health services in school settings. Still, resilience perspectives should not be overgeneralized to school mental health practice because risk and resilience wax and wane over time and daily decisions about students'…
Descriptors: Resilience (Psychology), Health Services, Mental Health Programs, Mental Health
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Belch, Holley A. – New Directions for Student Services, 2011
One of the fastest-growing categories of disability in the college student population is psychiatric disabilities: bipolar disorder, anxiety disorders, and borderline personality disorders, among other. Appropriate treatment and support can provide students with psychiatric disabilities the opportunity to develop their talents and realize their…
Descriptors: Mental Disorders, College Students, Student Personnel Services, Inclusion
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Kiang, Lisa; Fuligni, Andrew J. – Journal of Youth and Adolescence, 2010
Establishing a sense of life meaning is a primary facet of well-being, yet is understudied in adolescent development. Using data from 579 adolescents (53% female) from Latin American, Asian, and European backgrounds, demographic differences in meaning in life, links with psychological and academic adjustment, and the role of meaning in explaining…
Descriptors: Adolescent Development, Ethnicity, Adolescents, Asian Americans
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Thelen, Peggy; Klifman, Tammy – Young Children, 2011
Transitions in early childhood classrooms are changes from one activity to another or from one place to another. Well-planned transitions can be positive learning experiences for children. During transitions children can sing songs, follow a leader by copying his or her physical motions, practice counting, or even recite a favorite poem or nursery…
Descriptors: Children, Early Childhood Education, Student Adjustment, Student Behavior
Thomas, Sally Spencer – Chronicle of Higher Education, 2009
As a faculty adviser at Regis University, the author has seen countless students who feel under stress and wonder if they are up for the challenge of college life. That stress has only been compounded by the financial difficulties that many more students and their families are now facing. But the good news is that individuals who work on campuses…
Descriptors: Emotional Intelligence, Mental Health, Student Leadership, Faculty Advisers
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Fleischer, Leonard – Reclaiming Children and Youth, 2010
Transition is a term typically used in education to refer to the significant shifts that students encounter before, during, and after their school experience. These changes can occur on a daily basis, as in the transition between classes and the associated behavioral outcomes that might be seen, or changes can be experienced on a larger scale when…
Descriptors: Emotional Intelligence, Independent Living, Disabilities, Educational Experience
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Tao, Jiaqing; Yang, Xiaohu – Chinese Education and Society, 2010
Instrumental to the successful running of the Xinjiang Classes are its teachers, many of whom are Han Chinese. This article explores the important roles teachers of the Xinjiang Class play in the lives of Xinjiang Class students inside and outside of the classroom. From homesickness, to hygiene, to scholastic endeavors, Han teacher-mothers…
Descriptors: Classroom Techniques, Foreign Countries, Caring, Teacher Student Relationship
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Fischer, F. M.; Radosevic-Vidacek, B.; Koscec, A.; Teixeira, L. R.; Moreno, C. R. C.; Lowden, A. – Mind, Brain, and Education, 2008
Daytime fatigue and lack of sleep seem to increase throughout adolescent years. Several environmental, psychological, and biological factors have been associated with the development of sleep across adolescence. The aim of the present article is to summarize these factors and to give examples of various outcomes in sleep patterns among adolescents…
Descriptors: Sleep, Adolescents, Fatigue (Biology), Intervention
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Harvey, Vickie L.; Housel, Teresa Heinz – New Directions for Teaching and Learning, 2011
Academic personnel who were first-generation college students (FGS) are uniquely positioned to consider the questions these students often have about the college experience. Academia needs first-generation and working-class voices to diversify an academic culture that is often socially stratified. As more FGS enroll in colleges and universities,…
Descriptors: First Generation College Students, College Faculty, Social Stratification, Teacher Student Relationship
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Sarr, Karla Giuliano; Mosselson, Jacqueline – Yearbook of the National Society for the Study of Education, 2010
The schooling experience of refugee students in the United States is inherently complex and demonstrates tensions between students' high aspirations and true opportunities present within the host culture. The majority of refugees view education as the key to economic mobility and hope for the future. However, the literature on refugee achievement…
Descriptors: Academic Achievement, Foreign Countries, Educational Experience, Refugees
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